Application of John Pavlecka

327 F.2d 504, 51 C.C.P.A. 1016
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7056
StatusPublished

This text of 327 F.2d 504 (Application of John Pavlecka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of John Pavlecka, 327 F.2d 504, 51 C.C.P.A. 1016 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the-Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 4, 23, 24, 36-38, 41,. 45, 47, 48, 50, 53 and 55-59 in application, serial No. 632,601, filed January 4, 1957,. entitled “Interlocked Panel Structure.”' Twenty-six claims were allowed by the-examiner.

The invention relates to joints for fastening together panels, walls and the-like. The joints are particularly useful, where the interior space between panels, is inaccessible and when simple assemblage is desired. Basically the joint, comprises a mortise-and-tenon, assembled frontally and keyed with linear rods of' various shapes. The following drawings-from appellant’s specification illustrate-one embodiment:

*505 In Fig. 1, 1 and 2 are portions of walls 'Or panels being assembled; 3 and 4 are .-stringers attached to the walls or panels; .and 8 and 9 are shoulders with reentrant portions such as 10 defining, with base 11, a dovetail mortise. Tenon 16 is narrower at its widest point than the mortise •opening (note dimensioning arrows) thus permitting frontal entry of the tenon. Fig. 2 shows the mortise-and-tenon in juxtaposed engaged relation with marginal lands 8 and 13, 9 and 14 (Fig. 1) in abutment. Blocking keys 19 and 20 are inserted (Fig. 3) preventing exit of the tenon from the mortise and rigidly holding the resultant joint.

Appellant discloses variations in shape and size of both mortises-and-tenons and blocking keys. However, all disclosed embodiments have in common an oversized mortise into which a tenon is frontally insertable, the unit held rigid by a suitably shaped blocking key inserted longitudinally of the mortise-and-tenon.

Figs. 4 and 16 show two of the many variations.

In Fig. 4, the blocking keys 19a and 20a .are connected by web 21 forming a unitary G-shaped key. Fig. 16 shows a .single panel (upper unnumbered edge), which is attached to stringer 114 and •connected via zig-zag key 119 and stringers 115 and 116 to two panels (lower unnumbered edges). Blocking key 119 serves the dual function of holding the lower two abutting panels to one another and parallel to the upper single panel. Appellant’s disclosure also shows embodiments wherein panels are joined at corners and airfoils are fastened together.

All claims on appeal have in common recitation of the mortise-and-tenon wherein frontal entry of the tenon is made possible by an oversized mortise, the unit held rigid by linear blocking keys. The claims differ only in features such as arrangement of panels, position of stringers on panels, number of stringers on panels, number of mortises-and-tenons per stringer, etc. Appellant conceded at oral argument that the claims would stand or fall together since but one inventive concept is involved. Claim 4 is representative and reads:

4. In a structure, a panel, a structural member extending along one face of said panel, a stringer extending on said panel face in opposed alinement with said structural member, said structural member and said stringer bearing marginal shoulders and ledges at a distance from said panel face and between said shoulders and ledges bearing reentrant mortise-and-tenon instru-mentalities, said instrumentalities having each mortise thereof wider than each tenon and being entered into each other in a direction normal to said panel face and into confronting positions of said shoulders with said ledges and with a gap between at least the reentrant portions thereof, a linear key or keys slid endwise into each gap and by engagement at said reentrant portions of said in-strumentalities said key or keys blocking said structural member and stringer against separation in said *506 normal direction and urging each into abutment with the other at said shoulders and ledges thereof for relative immobility and coaction as a unitary stress member for said panel.

The sole ground of rejection is un-patentability over the following art:

Guimonneau 1,388,181

London 2,164,138

French Patent 924,327

Swedish Patent 121,639

Aug. 23, 1921

June 27, 1939

Aug. 1, 1947

May 11, 1948

The claims were rejected as follows:

(1) Claims 4, 23, 24, 38, 41, 45, 47 and 55 — unpatentable over London in view of Guimonneau;

(2) Claim 53 — unpatentable over London in view of Swedish patent;

(3) Claims 36, 37, 48 and 50 — un-patentable over Swedish patent; and

(4) Claims 56-59 — unpatentable over French patent in view of Guimonneau.

Rejection (1)

London teaches a structure utilizing mortises-and-tenons for snapping together panels or walls. Fig; 4, relied on by the examiner and the board and reproduced in part below, shows mortises 54 into which are inserted tenons 58.

The examiner recognized the differences in appellant’s and London’s mortise-and-tenon, stating:

“The mortise-and-tenon joint of London is recognized not to be the precise type of mortise-and-tenon joint as that claimed by appellant, but the London mortise elements 54’, 54", 54° and tenon elements 58 are resilient, thus permitting these London components to be ‘entered into each other in a direction normal to said panel face and into confronting positions of said shoulders with said ledges’ as claimed.”

*507 Guimonneau is cited to show the iron-tal entry dovetail aspect of appellant’s invention. Fig. 1 of the reference is reproduced below:

The Guimonneau patent, entitled ■"Building Wall,” states:

“This invention relates to a dis-mountable wall built without using mortar. According to this invention, molded blocks or slabs of a thickness adapted to form one part of that of the wall to be built are provided on one side with dovetail tenons which are placed between similar tenons on similar blocks oppositely arranged and adapted to form the other part of the thickness of the wall, the laterally inclined faces of said dovetail tenons being also inclined vertically so as to provide between adjacent tenons on opposite blocks downwardly tapering chambers into which downwardly tapering wedges are dropped so as to lock the blocks together. The design of the blocks is such that in building the wall the joints may be staggered in the vertical as well as in the horizontal direction.
*■**•»* *
“As shown in Fig. 1, each block or slab 1 of a suitable thickness to form a part of the thickness of the wall is provided on one face with a plurality of projections or tenons 2 extending parallelly to the small sides of the slab from the bottom face to the top face and at right angles to the general plane thereof. These tenons may have the general shape of dovetails the larger bases of which are all in the same plane parallel to the other flat face of the block and they are spaced at an equal distance apart from each other. The inclined faces 3 of each dovetail tenon are not perpendicular to the upper and lower faces of the block.

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Bluebook (online)
327 F.2d 504, 51 C.C.P.A. 1016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-john-pavlecka-ccpa-1964.